"During my four years in the White House, I kept a
personal diary by dictating my thoughts and observations several times each
day… When dictating entries to my diary… I intertwined my personal opinions
and activities with a brief description of the official duties I performed.

Readers should remember that I seldom exercised any restraint on what I
dictated, because I did not contemplate the more personal entries ever being
made public… Despite a temptation to conceal my errors, misjudgments of
people, or lack of foresight, I decided when preparing this book not to
revise the original transcript…

Throughout this book, I wrote explanatory notes to help the reader
understand the context of the entries, bring to life the duties of a
president, offer insights into a number of the people I worked with, and
point out how many of the important challenges remain the same… In
presenting this annotated diary, my intention is not to defend or excuse my
own actions or to criticize others, but simply to provide, based on current
knowledge, an objective analysis."
-- Excerpted from the Preface (pgs. xiii-xv)

Jimmy Carter, the 39th President of the United States, ran the U.S. Ship of
State from 1977 to 1981, four perilous years marked by crises in everything
from the Middle East to human rights to the economy to the Cold War to the
environment to nuclear power. To his credit, Carter in retirement can
proudly reflect that during his tenure, "We obeyed the law, we told the
truth, and we kept the peace." This turn of events proved to be a breath of
fresh air for a country which had emerged from the Vietnam War and Watergate
scandal extremely cynical about its political leaders.

And thanks to a tip from President Nixon who made the suggestion the first
time they met, Carter decided to start keeping a journal while he was in
office. If you remember, Jimmy had a certain, down-home folksy charm which
had endeared him to the electorate, and that same tone is reflected in White
House Diary, a 600-page opus condensed from what was originally over
5,000-pages in length.

The former president augmented the chronologically-arranged text with a
sprinkling of present-day commentary where necessary to help elucidate the
material. Basically, the book offers both a broad look at the scope of the
Chief Executive's exhausting daily schedule as well as an intimate peek
inside the workings of the man's mind.

Personally, I most enjoyed the humanizing entries, such as the one that
starts, "Mama fell and broke her right hip" as he frets about the health of
First Mother Miss Lillian. I could even appreciate the minimalism he
employed while on vacation when "Fishing all day" says it all.

A delightful, eye-opening memoir which reveals Jimmy Carter as still a
simple peanut farmer from Plains, Georgia who never compromised his faith,
integrity or commitment to family while tackling the responsibilities of
what might very well be the most demanding job on the face of the Earth.